“We were saying, ‘Should we pull the trigger?’ and then we saw
that story about the Hangover Bus," Gonzalez said to ABC News, referring to Vegas' Hangover
Heaven bus. "When we saw that, we said ‘Anything is
possible’.”

Gonzalez and Cass are now ordained ministers and have officiated
four weddings since the wagon's debut last week. The two owners
told ABC News if they can perform four to six weddings a
day, they can earn as much as they were earning in the corporate
world.

To get married at the wagon, you are required to obtain a
marriage license beforehand. Other than that, the wagon is
all-inclusive, with a minister (Cass or Gonzalez), wedding photos
and even a free T-shirt if you use the wagon before the end of
July.

The wagon has a list of "preferred locations" in Vegas where you
can reserve it, like in front of the "Welcome to Las Vegas sign"
or on a picturesque pedestrian bridge.

But in the event you need to get married fast, you can beckon the
wagon's services immediately with a call or text between noon and
9 p.m. Gonzalez told ABC News that the wagon will travel
“all the way down to Boulder City, where the Dam is, and out into
Red Rock Canyon.”

Unfortunately, that means a middle-of-the-night drunken wedding
in New York City is out of the picture.